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Bøger i African Expressive Cultures serien

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  • af Daniel B. Reed
    247,95 kr.

    Ge, formerly translated as "e;mask"e; or "e;masquerade,"e; appears among the Dan people of Cote d'Ivoire as a dancing and musical embodiment of their social ideals and religious beliefs. In Dan Ge Performance, Daniel B. Reed sets out to discover what resides at the core of Ge. He finds that Ge is defined as part of a religious system, a form of entertainment, an industry, a political tool, an instrument of justice, and a form of resistance-and it can take on multiple roles simultaneously. He sees genu (pl.) dancing the latest dance steps, co-opting popular music, and acting in concert with Ivorian authorities to combat sorcery. Not only are the bounds of traditional performance stretched, but Ge performance becomes a strategy for helping the Dan to establish individual and community identity in a world that is becoming more religiously and ethnically diverse. Readers interested in all aspects of expressive culture in West Africa will find fascinating material in this rich and penetrating book.

  • af Sidney Littlefield Kasfir
    317,95 kr.

    Focusing on the theme of warriorhood, Sidney Littlefield Kasfir weaves a complex history of how colonial influence forever changed artistic practice, objects, and their meaning. Looking at two widely diverse cultures, the Idoma in Nigeria and the Samburu in Kenya, Kasfir makes a bold statement about the links between colonialism, the Europeans' image of Africans, Africans' changing self representation, and the impact of global trade on cultural artifacts and the making of art. This intriguing history of the interaction between peoples, aesthetics, morals, artistic objects and practices, and the global trade in African art challenges current ideas about artistic production and representation.

  • - Photography in Mali, West Africa
    af Candace M. Keller
    231,95 kr.

    Imaging Culture is a sociohistorical study of the meaning, function, and aesthetic significance of photography in Mali, West Africa, from the 1930s to the present.

  • af Kai Kresse
    413,95 - 837,95 kr.

  • af Elisha P. Renne
    296,95 - 837,95 kr.

    Veils, Turbans, and Islamic Reform in Northern Nigeria tells the story of Islamic reform from the perspective of dress, textile production, trade, and pilgrimage over the past 200 years.

  • - Shadows of Empire
    af Laura Edmondson
    162,95 - 403,95 kr.

  • - Music, Media, and Morality
    af Vicki L. Brennan
    274,95 - 792,95 kr.

  • - Kinship, Gender, and Ethnicity in a Yoruba Town
    af John Thabiti Willis
    317,95 - 837,95 kr.

  • - Public Life and Morality in Cameroon
    af Clare A. Ignatowski
    231,95 kr.

    Explores the vitality of gurna ritual in the context of village life and urban neighbourhoods. This book shows how Tupuri songs publicize scandals and provide an arena for social commentary on the challenges of modern life. It discusses the creative and communal process by which local livelihoods and identities are validated in dance and song.

  • - Ghanaian Trickster Performance in a Web of Neoliberalism
    af David Afriyie Donkor
    287,95 - 787,95 kr.

  • - The Architecture of Elsewhere
    af Sandy Prita Meier
    231,95 - 787,95 kr.

  • af Vlad Dima
    317,95 - 792,95 kr.

  • - Divination, Allegory, Tragedy, Proverb, Panegyric
    af Adeleke Adeeko
    296,95 - 792,95 kr.

  • af Heather M. Akou
    231,95 kr.

    Politics and culture in everyday apparel

  • - Popular Music and Tanzania's Music Economy
    af Alex Perullo
    253,95 - 492,95 kr.

    The pulse of Africa's growing music scene

  • af John Conteh-Morgan
    231,95 - 721,95 kr.

    Staging a new politics of performance in the African diaspora

  • - True Story!
    af Herman Wasserman
    233,95 kr.

    Tabloids hotly debated in South Africa

  • - Sidi Ballo and the Art of West African Masquerade
    af Patrick R. McNaughton
    231,95 kr.

    In 1978, Patrick McNaughton witnessed a bird dance masquerade in the small town of Dogoduman. He was so affected by this performance that its artistic power has never left him. Here, he considers the components of the performance, its pace, the performers, and what it means for understandings of Bamana and West African aesthetics and culture.

  • - The Nation on Stage
    af Laura Edmondson
    233,95 kr.

    An insight into the meaning and value of popular forms of expression during a time of political and social change in East Africa.

  • - The Creative Economy of Artists and Urban Life in Dakar
    af Joanna Grabski
    178,95 kr.

    Art World City focuses on contemporary art and artists in the city of Dakar, a famously thriving art metropolis in the West African nation of Senegal. Joanna Grabski illuminates how artists earn their livelihoods from the city's resources, possibilities, and connections. She examines how and why they produce and exhibit their work and how they make an art scene and transact with art world mediators such as curators, journalists, critics, art lovers, and collectors from near and far. Grabski shows that Dakar-based artists participate in a platform that has a global reach. They extend Dakar's creative economy and the city's urban vibe into an "e;art world city."e;

  • - Living Tuku Music in Zimbabwe
    af Jennifer W. Kyker
    274,95 - 824,95 kr.

    Oliver "e;Tuku"e; Mtukudzi, a Zimbabwean guitarist, vocalist, and composer, has performed worldwide and released some 50 albums. One of a handful of artists to have a beat named after him, Mtukudzi blends Zimbabwean traditional sounds with South African township music and American gospel and soul, to compose what is known as Tuku Music. In this biography, Jennifer W. Kyker looks at Mtukudzi's life and art, from his encounters with Rhodesian soldiers during the Zimbabwe war of liberation to his friendship with American blues artist Bonnie Raitt. With unprecedented access to Mtukudzi, Kyker breaks down his distinctive performance style using the Shona concept of "e;hunhu,"e; or human identity through moral relationships, as a framework. By reading Mtukudzi's life in connection with his lyrics and the social milieu in which they were created, Kyker offers an engaging portrait of one of African music's most recognized performers. Interviews with family, friends, and band members make this a penetrating, sensitive, and uplifting biography of one of the world's most popular musicians.

  • - Westerns, Violence, and Masculinity in Kinshasa
    af Ch. Didier Gondola
    287,95 - 787,95 kr.

    During the 1950s and 60s in the Congo city of Kinshasa, there emerged young urban male gangs known as "e;Bills"e; or "e;Yankees."e; Modeling themselves on the images of the iconic American cowboy from Hollywood film, the "e;Bills"e; sought to negotiate lives lived under oppressive economic, social, and political conditions. They developed their own style, subculture, and slang and as Ch. Didier Gondola shows, engaged in a quest for manhood through bodybuilding, marijuana, violent sexual behavior, and other transgressive acts. Gondola argues that this street culture became a backdrop for Congo-Zaire's emergence as an independent nation and continues to exert powerful influence on the country's urban youth culture today.

  • - Music, Dance, and Mobility in the Lives of Four Ivorian Immigrants
    af Daniel B. Reed
    317,95 - 827,95 kr.

    Daniel B. Reed integrates individual stories with the study of performance to understand the forces of diaspora and mobility in the lives of musicians, dancers, and mask performers originally from Cote d'Ivoire who now live in the United States. Through the lives of four Ivorian performers, Reed finds that dance and music, being transportable media, serve as effective ways to understand individual migrants in the world today. As members of an immigrant community who are geographically dispersed, these performers are unmoored from their place of origin and yet deeply engaged in presenting their symbolic roots to North American audiences. By looking at performance, Reed shows how translocation has led to transformations on stage, but he is also sensitive to how performance acts as a way to reinforce and maintain community. Abidjan USA provides a multifaceted view of community that is at once local, national, and international, and where identity is central, but transportable, fluid, and adaptable.

  • af Mhoze Chikowero
    317,95 - 827,95 kr.

    In this new history of music in Zimbabwe, Mhoze Chikowero deftly uses African sources to interrogate the copious colonial archive, reading it as a confessional voice along and against the grain to write a complex history of music, colonialism, and African self-liberation. Chikowero's book begins in the 1890s with missionary crusades against African performative cultures and African students being inducted into mission bands, which contextualize the music of segregated urban and mining company dance halls in the 1930s, and he builds genealogies of the Chimurenga music later popularized by guerrilla artists like Dorothy Masuku, Zexie Manatsa, Thomas Mapfumo, and others in the 1970s. Chikowero shows how Africans deployed their music and indigenous knowledge systems to fight for their freedom from British colonial domination and to assert their cultural sovereignty.

  • - The Poetics of Freedom in Urban Africa
    af Jesse Weaver Shipley
    317,95 - 827,95 kr.

    Trickster Theatre traces the changing social significance of national theatre in Ghana from its rise as an idealistic state project from the time of independence to its reinvention in recent electronic, market-oriented genres. Jesse Weaver Shipley presents portraits of many key figures in Ghanaian theatre and examines how Akan trickster tales were adapted as the basis of a modern national theatre. This performance style tied Accra's evolving urban identity to rural origins and to Pan-African liberation politics. Contradictions emerge, however, when the ideal Ghanaian citizen is a mythic hustler who stands at the crossroads between personal desires and collective obligations. Shipley examines the interplay between on-stage action and off-stage events to show how trickster theatre shapes an evolving urban world.

  • - Cultural Difference, Mimesis, and Media
    af Matthias Krings
    274,95 - 824,95 kr.

    Why would a Hollywood film become a Nigerian video remake, a Tanzanian comic book, or a Congolese music video? Matthias Krings explores the myriad ways Africans respond to the relentless onslaught of global culture. He seeks out places where they have adapted pervasive cultural forms to their own purposes as photo novels, comic books, songs, posters, and even scam letters. These African appropriations reveal the broad scope of cultural mediation that is characteristic of our hyperlinked age. Krings argues that there is no longer an "e;original"e; or "e;faithful copy,"e; but only endless transformations that thrive in the fertile ground of African popular culture.

  • - Performing Early Colonial Hegemony in the Congo
    af Allen F. Roberts
    274,95 kr.

    A Dance of Assassins presents the competing histories of how Congolese Chief Lusinga and Belgian Lieutenant Storms engaged in a deadly clash while striving to establish hegemony along the southwestern shores of Lake Tanganyika in the 1880s. While Lusinga participated in the east African slave trade, Storms' secret mandate was to meet Henry Stanley's eastward march and trace "e;a white line across the Dark Continent"e; to legitimize King Leopold's audacious claim to the Congo. Confrontation was inevitable, and Lusinga lost his head. His skull became the subject of a sinister evolutionary treatise, while his ancestral figure is now considered a treasure of the Royal Museum for Central Africa. Allen F. Roberts reveals the theatricality of early colonial encounter and how it continues to influence Congolese and Belgian understandings of history today.

  • - Popular Music and Social Change in Urban Ghana
    af Nathan Plageman
    253,95 - 822,95 kr.

    Highlife Saturday Night captures the vibrancy of Saturday nights in Ghana-when musicians took to the stage and dancers took to the floor-in this penetrating look at musical leisure during a time of social, political, and cultural change. Framing dance band "e;highlife"e; music as a central medium through which Ghanaians negotiated gendered and generational social relations, Nate Plageman shows how popular music was central to the rhythm of daily life in a West African nation. He traces the history of highlife in urban Ghana during much of the 20th century and documents a range of figures that fueled the music's emergence, evolution, and explosive popularity. This book is generously enhanced by audiovisual material on the Ethnomusicology Multimedia website.

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